Who Controlled the Press?
Two Communists controlled the main French press.
Andre Laurendeau was Editor in Chief of Le Devoir, both being part of the red ring emerging in Quebec as documented by Robert Rumilly in 1956. The purposes of the attack on Gordon in the railway committee, an attack that was a red flag, were to pave the way for the Communist Castro-trained FLQ terrorists and the setup of a phony royal commission to seem to legalize dismantling Canada for the benefit of ethnic French Canadians; however, instead the commission, finally set up under Pearson after Diefenbaker says no to it and rapidly rolls out of the way with new elections, is used to ordain Trudeau “polyethnic pluralism” for Canada (April 1962 Cite Libre, New Treason), which does nothing to help the ethnic French Canadians. Laurendeau will co-chair the phony royal commission; while at the same time hosting two up-and-coming FLQ terrorist leaders in his home basement, along with others, including his own son, and journalists under pseudonyms (fearing they could be fired, as Pelletier was in 1964), all to write a far-left Marxist rag. In other words, the royal commission begins the dismantling and communist restructuring of Canada for decentalization and regional union, commencing with the mass transfer of the world’s population into the country in the guise of a mere “policy” (to eradicate Confederation).
Gerard Pelletier was Editor in Chief of La Presse, and shortly after the railway committee and the rapid attack on Gordon by Pelletier’s columnist Gingras, Pelletier is found at the Canadian Club giving a speech to businessmen at lunch, an impassioned plea for Communism in Canada. Pelletier is founder and co-editor with Pierre Elliott Trudeau of the pro-Soviet CITE LIBRE, which apparently heavily features socialist “planning” in its pages and happily calls itself the “little sister” of Esprit in French, a “cryptocommunist” review whose first issue in October 1932 features a favorably worded travel journal behind the Iron Curtain.




